Tuesday, September 30, 2014

You're tired of being single and impatient to move onto the cozy cocoon of being a couple with a special someone. But before you jump into a relationship with the first (or even second or third) possibility that comes along, there are some very good reasons why you should take your time.

Sunday, September 28, 2014

The effort you put into something is usually directly connected to the results you get. And the effort you put into something usually starts with what your intentions are. The is certainly the case at the start of a relationship.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

I don’t typically tailor my articles here to any specific dating
site or organization. But anyone following my blog like a Bible (or even occasionally
stumbling across it for a few laughs) will see periodic screen shots of actual
conversations I have with other users on the distinitive blue and white online
dating site. Obviously I am a regular
user and advocate of OK Cupid.

It’s one of the few
true “free” online dating sites. By “free” I mean that you don’t have to
provide any payment to the site or any company to create a profile, contact
other users, read/ send messages and use all their basic features.

A couple years ago when they were bought by the company that
owns Match.com they added an “upgrade” option with additional perks and
features (adding more photos, seeing who read your messages, additional levels
of screening who contacts you, etc. ) for a fee. It is entirely possible though to have success with the site without it
costing you anything more than your basic internet/ wifi fees.

I have also used POF (formerly known as Plenty of Fish) but I have found OK Cupid to be cleanest and
classiest free online dating site and it comes with lot of free additional features.
I think the amount of effort that OK Cupid encourages it’s users to put in,
help weed out the people who are just looking for pictures of local potential
mates and the option to say “let’s hook up”.

I particularly like
the questions and multiple choice answer options about opinions, lifestyle
choices and personal preferences that give you match percentages. The founders
of Ok Cupid initial started the questions and then opened up site so that users
could create their own questions. Sometime after the new owners of the site
took over, they took away that option. Possibly the decided that of the thousands
of questions already posed by users, there was never going to be any need for
new ones to be added to the list. (I respectfully disagree, but whatever.)

In the on and off four years that I have been using the
site, I have answered 1046 questions. If that seems like a lot to you, I should
mention that I’ve viewed other users pages who have answered literally double
that number. Talk about putting me to shame!

While I may be a female (as a rule women get more page views
than men) and a decent looking one (no false modesty but also no inflated ego
here) I have always had a standard of
never posting any pictures of myself that are immodest as a way to get cheap
attention. And by that I mean by wearing a swimming suit, showing off skin
in the boob/ butt areas, wearing revealing clothing or posing in sexually provocative
ways. (Well, there might have been one photo where I leaned over to get my
entire body in the mirror I was using for the selfie shot…)

Either way, I’m not using “Look at me I’m HOT and horny” photos
to attract attention. Nor am I in the most heavily searched age range (22-32) and YET, I pull in between 115 and 155
views a week. (I get more around the winter holidays, Valentine’s Day and
the beginning of summer when people especially want some companionship.) And typically 1-10 messages a day. I’ve
had a couple days stacked together where I didn’t get any mail, but it’s rare
and I usually find it’s because my inbox is full. Oops. Sorry.

I attribute most of that
traffic to my taking the tests and answering questions. If you take the
number of questions I have answered and divide it by the number of years I’ve
been on the site, and then that number by the number of weeks in the year you
get this. 1046/ 52=20.1

That means that I
answer about twenty questions a week.Not
only do I answer the questions, I write a couple sentences with some comments
about my answer. This not only gives a little insight into my thought
process behind my answer, but it has
opened countless doors for conversation by people who then write me to talk
about my answers. And it works.

Every time you answer a question, the site puts your picture
with a link to your page, and your response on the home search page of the
opposite gender (or whatever demographic you said you want to be found by).
This means that instead of your randomly being found by the people you want to
look for you, you’re on their home page smiling out from the screen with your
answer there tempting them to send you a message.

The beautiful thing
about the questions is that the answers are all your own opinions and preferences.
That means aside from the few that ask things like “Which is larger: The sun or
the Earth?” or ask Intelligence Test like questions, there are no wrong or
right answers.

By answering the questions they also slowly build up a “personality”
on the site about you. From time to time that data changes based upon your collective
answers to reflect the overall picture of who you are presenting yourself to
be. This is very helpful in showing you not only how you may look to others, but possibly guide you if you’re answering too many questions on the
same topic that might make other users think you are only interested in one
thing (sex, drugs, politics, whatever).

This is my most recent personality list.

The list is only
created after a user has answered 100 questions. Obviously the more
answers you give and by covering a variety of topics, it gives everyone a more well
rounded view of who you are. When looking at a prospective date, I always check this.

A
guy may be concerned if his personality says something he might
consider negative (like more arrogant or less experienced in love) but I consider it a bigger mark against them if they
don't have a personalty profile at all.

If you are new to online dating, I would recommend you forgo
the paid sites and try a free one. Like OK Cupid (no, I’m not getting paid to
say that.. I wish!).

If you are already an OK Cupid user, I would encourage you
to regularly answer the questions and add a few comments in the section
provided. Even if you don’t answer questions every day or ever week, when you
do it will absolutely drive more traffic to your page. And isn’t that what
online dating is about? Find someone and being found?

Answering questions (and reading the answers other people
give on the main page) will help you cut through some of the challenges in this
online game of find and seek.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

I get messages like these a lot. And I imagine that other women do as well. Especially women who wear more revealing clothing in their pictures. I'm sure guys just think they're being "honest" and "flattering". But it's really not.

That kind of deeply sexual statement is something you only say to a women AFTER you've gotten to know each other, have some familiarity/ comfort level and have established that there is mutual interest. It is NOT how you introduce yourself.

For the women who get these messages there are a variety of ways to respond to that kind of "I see you as a sexual object" kind of commentary.

Anger.

Being offended.

Just ignoring it.

But I like to be constructive. I want to help change people's perspectives not just modify their behavior. I see that as the way to really get to the root of the problem and correct it, not just kick it as a temporary fix. I honestly believe that by explaining the WHY and the HOW behind something, you make it so people go about things the right way for the right reasons.

The funny this is, by overly sexualizing women a lot of guys eliminate all possibility of getting what they want! I mean, isn't the guy's goal to get the woman to meet him and like him enough to be willing to have sex with him? And doesn't he have to get her interested in meeting him first? And doesn't he need to at least act like someone she would want to be around in order for any of that other stuff to happen?

If that's not the case and guys don't really expect or hope to get the girl to meet them, then it's harassment plain and simple. And if guys aren't embarrassed by harassing a girl just because she's a girl.. they should be!

Hopefully we can eventually get to a place where this concept becomes more mainstream and the idea of talking to each other like human beings will take on.

Until then, I'll keep trying to plant the seeds of common sense and common decency, one message at a time.